I have a typescript file called Projects.ts
that I want to reference a global variable declared in a bootstrap plugin called bootbox.js
.
I want to access a variable called bootbox
from within a TypeScript classes.
Is it possible?
I have a typescript file called Projects.ts
that I want to reference a global variable declared in a bootstrap plugin called bootbox.js
.
I want to access a variable called bootbox
from within a TypeScript classes.
Is it possible?
You need to tell the compiler it has been declared:
declare var bootbox: any;
If you have better type information you can add that too, in place of any
.
declare var myFunction: any;
?
Mar 13, 2018 at 0:26
declare var myFunction: (input: string) => void;
For those who didn't know already, you would have to put the declare
statement outside your class
just like this:
declare var Chart: any;
@Component({
selector: 'my-component',
templateUrl: './my-component.component.html',
styleUrls: ['./my-component.component.scss']
})
export class MyComponent {
//you can use Chart now and compiler wont complain
private color = Chart.color;
}
In TypeScript
the declare keyword is used where you want to define a variable that may not have originated from a TypeScript
file.
It is like you tell the compiler that, I know this variable will have a value at runtime, so don't throw a compilation error.
If it is something that you reference but never mutate, then use const
:
declare const bootbox;
If You want to have a reference to this variable across the whole project, create somewhere d.ts
file, e.g. globals.d.ts
. Fill it with your global variables declarations, e.g.:
declare const BootBox: 'boot' | 'box';
Now you can reference it anywhere across the project, just like that:
const bootbox = BootBox;
Here's an example.
// global.d.ts
declare global {
namespace NodeJS {
interface Global {
bootbox: string; // Specify ur type here,use `string` for brief
}
}
}
// somewhere else
const bootbox = global.bootbox
// somewhere else
global.bootbox = 'boom'
Download the bootbox typings
Then add a reference to it inside your .ts file.
bootbox
as any
, this will correctly type the bootbox
global so that properties on it are understood correctly by TypeScript. And this is true generally for other libraries. You can often find the type definition and import it. That is the proper way to do it.
May 21, 2022 at 2:46